Newspaper Page Text
MRS. LYON’S
ACHESLAND PAINS
Have All Gone Since Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg
etable Compound.
Terre Hill, Pa.—“ Kindly permit me
to give you my testimonial in favor of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com
pound. When I first
began taking it I
was suffering from
female troubles for
some time and had
almost all kinds of
aches—pains in low
er part of back and
in sides, and press
ing down pains. I
could not sleep and
had no appetite. Since I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound the aches and pains are all gone
and I feel like a new woman. I cannot
praise your medicine too highly. Mrs.
Augustus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa.
It is true that nature and a woman’s
work nas produced the grandest remedy
for woman’s ills that the world has
ever known. From the roots and
herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham,
forty years ago, gave to womankind
a remedy for their peculiar ills which
has proved more efficacious than any
other combination of drugs ever com
pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound is recognized
from coast to coast as the standard
remedy for woman’s ills.
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., are files containing hundreds of
thousands of letters from women seek
ing health—many of them openly state
over their own signatures that they have
regained their health by taking Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound;
and in some cases that it has saved them
from surgical operations.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PlLLS never
fail. Purely vegeta- -‘^-p
ble —act surely ADTFD<
but gently on
the liver. ■ LUa
Stop after jSKESgSff ■ IVER
dinner dis- J PILLS,
tress-cure \\_ *■■■
indigestion, - *
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
HAIR STAIN
"Walnutta”
For Gray, Streaked. Bleached and Red Hair or
Moustache. Matches Shade—Light Brown to
Black. Does not wash nor rub off. Sold by
your Druggist. Regular size, 60 cents.
to Howard Nichols, ■* one
F | MH 2208 Clark .v„ Si. Louis. Mo. ► |UU
I I UU and set a FREETrid Bottle. I I VW
That’s So.
“They say ages go in cycles." i
“Then this age is a motorcycle;”—
Baltimore American.
No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX
This is a prescription prepared es
pecially for Malaria or Chills and
Fever. Five or six doses will break
any case, and if taken then as a tonic
the fever will not return. 25c.—Adv.
Many a man who strives to emulate
the busy bee only succeeds in getting
stung.
It’s easy for women to get excited
over a thing they can't understand.
JM-.' IM— 111 ■I ■ !»! 11l I ■ «—l——
Good Cause for Alarm
Deaths from kidney diseases have in
creased 72% in twenty years. People over
do nowadays in so many ways that the con
stant filtering of poisoned blood weakens
the kidneys.
Beware of fatal Bright’s disease. When
backache or urinary ills suggest weak
kidneys, use Doan’s Kidney Pills, drink
water freely and reduce the diet. Avoid
coffee, tea and liquor.
Doan’s Kidney Pills command confi
dence, for no other remedy is so widely
used or so generally successful,
A Georgia Cose
“My kidneys be- . M r
pan to trouble me
about five years IttSaoroh
ago,” says James
L. Skinner, carpen- V. f LSk.
ter, of 300 Crawford ^.Zwlaa^
Ave., Augusta, Ga.
“I had sharp, pierC- yMaMsSowK
Ing pains tn my side JBRKKgBigI
and often the kidney \
secretions didn’t
pass for twelve
hours. Narcotics
brought me the only £ wMMBmWmBML
relief and the doetov
said 1 had kidney V
stones. Nothing BSajjß|jjS^^
helped me until I ^BSSSSS|BM»
used Doan's Kidney
Pills; they went to
the root of the trou- V
ble and the pain
used up. Six boxes cured me and I
haven’t suffered for two years.”
Get Doan's at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN’S^W
I FOSTERMILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
Bthe Bread |
: Life |
( E. ZARTMANN, D. D. |
Ex’ention Department
Lie irutitute, Chicago T
TEXT-"And Jesus said unto them, I
am the bread of life; he that cometh to
me shall never hunger: and he that be
lieveth on me shall never thirst. ... He
that eateth of this bread shall live for
ever." John 6135-58.
The time when
this was spoken
was one of the
most remarkable
occasions in the
life of Jesus-
Just after he had
fed five thousand
men with five bar
ley loaves and two
small fishes; and
twelve baskets of
fragments re
mained of the
scanty supply
which had been
blessed and multi
plied by the Mas-
ter. The multitude cared not for the
miracle—they were willing to follow
a man who could feed such a throng
with such a scant supply. Jesus uses
the occasion and their curiosity to
teach them that great lesson of which
the miracle of feeding was only a
faint shadow: Himself the only real
supply for the hungry soul —he that
cometh to me shall never hunger.
The Indispensable Christ.
This is one of the familiar and fa
mous “I am's" found in this Gospel
by John. 6:35, I am the bread of life;
8:12, I am the light of the world;
8:58, before Abraham was, I am;
10:9, I am the door; 10:11, I am the
good shepherd; 11:25, I am the resur
rection and the life; 14:6, I am the
way, the truth, and the life; 15:5. -I
am the vine, ye are the branches.
These pictures are parables linking
Jesus with the vital, fundamental
forces of the universe, setting forth
tho tenderest and dearest sugges
tions, touching the things we all
need, and assuring us of safety, knowl
edge, and lulness of life. If you are
a Christian and there Is any lack in
your life, it is only because you have
not appropriated Christ for your dally
need. If you are not a Christian, you
need wait no longer, for this same
Jesus is able to meet that need of
yours, even to save unto -the utter
most.
Think of him as the Indispensable
Christ, for that is what bread is to
us, the very staff of life. Here, In
the story of the miracle. Jesus says,
"You marvel because I have fed the
body, and you would perish without
nourishment such as I have provided;
but your souls are in greater need,
and they will perish forever if they
are not fed; behold, I am the bread of
life; he that cometh to me shall never
hunger; he that eateth of this bread
shall live forever." Just as bread Is
a necessity of our physical life, Jesus
Is the real deep need of the human
soul. No lesson Is more important
than this, in a time when men are
trying everywhere else except tn Jesus
to find satisfaction and sustenance and
safety. You say you do not feel your
need of Jesus; all the more reason
why you should examine yourself, and
realize the real lack of your life; for
life consists not. in the abundance of
things which a man possesses but in
the possession of Jesus Christ. In
deed, the man who has no hunger
and is conscious of no needs has
neither knowledge of himself nor of
God. Love, peace, security, progress,
are all secured and assured to us only
in Christ; and all are included in the
MOTHER’S CREED.
I believe in the eternal importance
of the home as the fundamental insti
tution of society.
I believe in the Immeasurable possi
bilities of every boy and girl.
I believe in the imagination, the
trust, the hopes, aud the ideals which
dwell in the hearts of all children.
I believe in the beauty of nature, of
art, of books, and of friendship.
1 believe in the satisfaction of duty.
I believe in the little homely joys of
every-day life.
1 believe in the goodness of the
great design which lies behind our
complex world.
I believe in the safety and peace
which sorrounds us through the over
brooding love of God.
I believe in the will of God as the
one and only law of human life in all
its relations.
I believe in training my children to
be faithful children of God and disci
ples of Jesus Christ. —Unitarian Cal
endar.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE. ALAMO. GEORGIA.
> first and greatest need of the human
? soul—salvation; having obtained that
from Christ as the result of our faith
? in him, everything else is guaranteed
g I to us in him —“he that cometh to me
? - shall never hunger. “Christ goes on,
g in another verse of this chapter, to
£ explain this primal truth and funda
? mental need: “and the bread that I
£ will give is my flesh, which I will give
> for the life of the world.” The cross
> of Christ Is still your starting-point
£ in your real life, the life of the soul,
> and your source of supply for the new
£ needs of every new day: “He that
> spared not his own Son, but delivered
j him up for us all, how shall he not
, with him also freely give us all
things?”
Consider the process by which we
get Christ as the food for the soul.
Verse 35, He that cometh to me shall
i never hunger; and he that believeth
i on me shall never thirst; v. 51, If
• any man eat of this bread he shall
• live forever; v. 54, Whoso eateth my
i flesh, and drinketh my blood, hath
■ eternal life; v. 56. He that eateth my
I flesh and drinketh my blood, dwelleth
I in me, and 1 in him; v. 58, He that
. ■ eateth of this bread shall live for
। ever. Here we have a simple process
I : but a profound truth, and Christ sets
f himself forth as the same food for
. all souls; he is not one thing to the
( rich man and another to the man
■ who cannot afford the luxury—he is
! the bread of lite; just that to the man
. who coujd pay a fabulous sutn, and
. just that to the man who has no
। money. And yet the cost of bread
is great: the seed is cast into the
ground and dies before the stalk ap
pears; the grain must be cut down by
, t the reapers; there is the severe proc
ess of grinding; and finally, the in
tense heat of the fire which perfects
and completes the process, Christ
could not be the bread of life apart
from the garden, the cross, the tomb
“Ye were redeemed . . . with the
precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb
without blemish and *without spot ”
If you come home at night, after the
severe toil of the day, how do you get
nourishment out of the bread set be
fore you at the evening meal? By
discoursing about the constituent
parts which make up the loaf of
bread? By praising the love and the
skill of the hands which provided the
bread? By admiration of the form
of flavor of the loaf? No, no; but by
the homely but necessary process of
appropriation. Hereby Jearn a lesson
for that deep hunger which your soul
feels —appropriate Christ, who says, I
am the bread of life; he that cometh
unto me shall never hunger. Let
your faith lay hold of him. His gra
cious promise is a present tense—
“ Whoso eateth my flesh, and drinketh
by blood, h-a-t-h eternal life." You
say,’ this is hard to understand Do
you hesitate about the appropriation
of dally bread because there are
things you cannot understand? If you
do, you will die.
Once more; Can you understand how
bread builds you up? And faith in
Christ will make your soul grow, j
though you do not understand the
mystery. Hear also that other pre
cious promise: “Him that cometh to
me I will in no wise cast out.”
"Wherefore do ye spend money for
that which is not bread? And your
labor for that which satisfieth not?”
Answer for yourself: What will you
do without Jesus? Why not accept '
him now? “Lord, evermore give us
this bread." “Give us, this day. our
dally bread."
Mystic Democracy.
“There is asceticism and asceticism, i
In these days there is a mystic de- j
mocracy, that hates not the world,
neither the things In the world, but
which knowing God to dwell in human
lives, and seeing these shrines neg
lected and in ruins, because of lux
ury on the one hand, poverty on the
other, and Injustice and self-seeking
in so many hearts, there is a mystic
democracy, I say, that refuses to own !
what the many may not own, and like ‘
a new Puritanism, it makes men
strong.”—Edwin A. Rumball.
Begin at Once. ' !
"Lord, I do discover a fallacy, I
whereby I have long deceived myself,” 1
wrote Thomas Fuller. “It is this: I |
have desired to begin my amendment '
from my birthday, or from the first i
day of the year, or from some eminent
festival, that so my repentance might !
bear some remarkable date. But when I
those days were come, I have ad- i
journed my amendment to some other !
time. Thus, whilst I could not agree
with myself when to start. I have al- .
most lost the running of the race. I ;
am resolved thus to befool myself no
longer. I see no day equal to today; ■
the instant time is always the fittest
time.”
A right use of the opportunities of
instruction afforded me in early youth
would have made me a scholar ere
my twenty-fifth year, and have saved
to me at least ten of the best years of
my lite.—Hugh Miller.
There is only one way to get- ready
for immortality, and that is to love
cheerfully and faithfully as we can.—
Henry van Dyke
MB
Jl7PansDritik~
JlfOoman's'Dritik- 4. <
gBS S JK JB SB, J
q A®
- '
Bi fW ■W 1- ■ ' ■
I
A "^figorously good-—and keenly I
delicious. Thirst-quenching
S and refreshing. K
I The national beverage ® S
1 —and yours. El Jr
Wk
Wa Demand the genuine by full name— Jy
Nicknames encourage subshtutioo.
THE COCA-COLA COMPANY
Whea ’"' tt Atliu>ta,G*.
you see »n k elf s9b : it
Arrow thick
of Coco-CoU.
1-f
Consoling.
"Do you believe in long engage-1
ments?" "Os course. The longer ai
man Is engaged, the less time he has
to be married.”
RUB-MY-TISM ;
Will cure your Rheumatizm and all j
kinds of aches and pains—Neuralgia, ।
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts,
Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic ‘
Anodyne. Price 25c. —Adv. i 1
i And most of our tragedies look like ! I
■ comedies to our neighbors. ।
Memories of the oh
South in Every Can
I of French Market Coffee
The romance of the days of Andrew Jackson, of Henry Clay,
y of the picturesque pirate chief, LaFitte, and of the beautiful
women and brave men of the old South, clings around
every cup of delicious old French Market Coffee.
S' Enjoying its unmatched aroma
S'; and wonderful soothing flavor in-
?; vokes the picture of the quaint
i B stalls where belles and beaux
i congregated after every festive
& occasion for the crowning pleasure
of a good-night cup of this most
S 1 popular of all beverages.
Bsj The French Market Coffee that
, you get from your grocer, in per-
$ J Rich Bleed i
£Jr Insures Health
Keep the Liver and
Kidneys in good order
»nd you will keep well.
^ ear ^* Physical Ailments
rosy be traced to the deran^e-
BJ men 1 these organs
OR. DEWITTS
Liver, Blood and
Kidney Remedy
■ the Lh’er and Kidneys, stimulates
■ their action, drives out of the system poison
| oua secretions, such as Uric Acid, Bile, etc..
B and produces Rich. Healthy Blood.
H Female Weakness, Chronic and
U gl c c Headache. Constipation, Pains in Back.
Shoulders and Limbs, Rheumatism and
Scrofula. Syphilitic Taint. Removes Pimples
and other Skin Eruptions.
GOOD BLOOD TONIC
Price SI.OO Per Bottle
Hundreds of Testimonials of Reiharxable Cures
W. J. BARKER CO., Baltimore, Md., U, $, A.
Manufacturing Druggists
U roar d^iw dooa nut mU thia Remedy. write m
AX'
UwJm O. D. t»y«r far t KKk EX ABl5 AT ION M
i«. »fyo« “ if •
Ma»l <o »2» ‘ M • av ’ h •«•»* out BPaCIAU
pr^.ll 75 MratiM Udl««.’»•»•'« B^y*’ »!m *ad if by eaprau.
HIGH POINT SALES CO., HIGH POINT.N. C.
I UZA liT MEW ART NTQ (Men and women.) Special
I WAR I OU HCW AUIR I 0 libiTiil inducement®. Cood
rirb (unq»a»y, Dept. 9, HU East Luart Blrwi, Mprieffleld, Baa*.
HaveHalfSect»nLand^J?,7Mr®
hive you to offer? Box SOS, Miles City, Montano
fectly-sealed packages, is identical
with the historic French blend
served in the old French Market
in New Orleans.
Try it once and you’ll agree there
is only one real old French Market
Coffee — only one coffee with a
history.
Roasted by our unique, hygienic
process.
French Market Mills
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd,, Proprietors.)
NEW ORLEANS
Directions—We recommend that you make
French Market Coffee in your usual way.
If you find it too strong reduce quantity
until strength and flavor are satisfactory.
French Market makes more cups of good
coffee to the pound than other brands,
thereby reducing your coffee bill. (109)
SPECIAL TO WOMEN
The most economical, cleansing and
germicidal of all antiseptics 13
A soluble Antiseptic Powder to
be dissolved in water as needed.
As a medicinal antiseptic for douches
in treating catarrh, inflammation or
ulceration of nose, throat, and that
caused by feminine ills it has no equal,
i For ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtine
in their private correspondence with
women, which proves its superiority.
Women who have been cured say
it is "worth its weight in gold.” At
druggists. 50c. large box, or by mail.
The Paxton Toilet Co, Boston, Mass.